Actually, it usually will drive it faster, particularly in a very short barrel. They may have an almost identical maximum velocity, (pressure has a small effect on the speed of sound), but we usually aren't firing airguns at their maximum velocity anyway, so having 2000 extra psi will absolutely allow for faster acceleration of the projectile, (same velocity from a shorter barrel), more kinetic energy with the same length barrel, more shots per charge, etc... Just imagine that you had a PCP that was limited to 1500 psi. Sure, you could make it work, but having 4500 psi gives you a lot more design options.10,000 psi of compressed air won't drive a projectile any faster than 8,000 psi. Compressed air simply does not have the physical capacity to expand that rapidly behind a projectile moving faster than about 1800 fps. (I think that's the number, it's close).
Yes it would be expensive to shoot a helium gun. Yes the seals and rifle would need to be reingineered. But a rifle designed to use a light gas will shoot MUCH faster than any rifle that uses compressed air. And guys would buy them. And they will have problems inherent to the venture.
The heat from a powderburner goes out the barrel as gas. Very little transfers. A powderburner barrel gets hot from friction. Not the explosion. An airgun barrel will get almost as hot as a powderburner with the same friction. The heat from the gunpowder explosion is rapidly expanding gas that exits the barrel. It's only in there a microsecond and does not transfer with convection to the gun metal. Just as the superheated air in a springer does not transfer into the parts. It's not enough duration to heat things up. Just burn the surface of the seal from the flash.
The friction of the projectile in the barrel is 90% of the heat that is leftover after the shot. The heat from the explosion exits the barrel as hot gas and very little is transferred.
The heat generated in a PB absolutely can be a problem. In the G11 caseless cartridge rifle one of the biggest problems they had was heat buildup. In a conventional rifle much of the heat gets expelled by the empty cartridge cases. In the G11 they had to develop ceramics and special lubes to keep it functioning at unusually high heat. The same issue affects direct impingement rifles to a much lesser degree. Heat is also one of the things that PB suppressors must be designed for. Bottom line is that heat is absolutely a problem that firearms have to deal with and the closest thing airguns experience is a cooling effect from gas expansion.
You should also check out the price of helium. Where I live a 81 cf tank refill is $185. How many airgunners are going to want to pay that kind of money per tank? https://www.mmballoons.com/buy-helium-tanks/
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